Victoria’s Secret ‘sorry’ for model’s headdress on the runway

Every weekday, PR Daily associate editor Alan Pearcy highlights the day’s most compelling stories and amusing marginalia on the Web in this, #TheDailySpin.

When some of the world’s most beautiful supermodels strut down the Victoria’s Secret runway wearing next to nothing, it’s hard to imagine anyone noticing what’s on their heads. Yet it was a model’s head dressing that ensnared the lingerie retailer in a PR firestorm—because it was a Native American-style feather headdress. Model Karlie Kloss donned the unfortunate accessory during the brand’s annual fashion show. In response, the company has apologized, noting it wouldn’t air the outfit during the event’s televised broadcast Dec. 4 on CBS.

Although it hasn’t apologized, Target might soon be sorry that it ever decided to up the onset of its Black Friday sales event to 9:00 p.m. on Thanksgiving. The move triggered the retailer’s staff to issue an online petition using Change.org. It is just one of the more than 40 additional petitions calling on retailers to allow families to spend Thanksgiving together by opening on Friday. As of Tuesday evening, Target stores’ employee petition had accumulated more than 200,000 signatures.

While I feel for the Target personnel, selfishly I’d rather sign a petition to see the brand’s Christmas Champ return for the season rather this duo’s underwhelming and less captivating attempt at holiday cheer.

Meanwhile, clothing retailer Gap’s is spreading love of “every shade” with its new, celebrity-seeped winter campaign that includes Michael J. Fox and wife Tracy Pollan, musician Rufus Wainwright and his husband, artistic director Jörn Weisbrodt, rapper Nas and his father, blues musician Olu Dara, as well as the cast of NBC’s “The New Normal.” If you listen carefully, you can practically hear the blood of One Million Moms boiling.

His blood wasn’t quite bubbling, but Steve Young did look bothered during Monday Night Football on ESPN when Rick Reilly—who didn’t realize cameras were rolling—shamelessly insisted on grabbing credit for breaking a story on Twitter about Pittsburgh Steeler’s quarterback Ben Roethlisberger’s shoulder injury.

What do professional athletes care about bad calls when they’re making their own calls off the field on side business projects. From a fanny pack with speakers to a modern spin on the classic barbershop, BuzzFeed highlights five of the most random investments here.

Other businesses can now use Skype to better reach prospective clientele and partners face-to-face with the help of a new platform rolled out by the service appropriately dubbed “Skype in the workplace.”

Pepsi-Cola also recently rolled out a new product. The beverage manufacturer and distributor introduced its Japanese market to a fiber-infused variety of its namesake soda that it touts as a “fat-blocking” soft drink.

I’m sure ABC’s Denver affiliate has found the person at fault for shoddily using a photoshopped book cover of Paul Broadwell’s David Petraeus biography, “All In,” while covering a story on the two’s alleged affair. Instead, the image read, ““All Up In My Snatch.”